19 th century pioneers - wordpress.com · 19/05/2012 · 19th century pioneers based on present...
TRANSCRIPT
19th Century Pioneers
Based on present knowledge, there was a minimum of 28 known settlers in the Seventeen
Mile Rocks farming district at some stage during the 19th
century. Below are brief profiles of
7 pioneer landholders whose descendants continued to be associated with the area in the 20th
century. Our book When River Was Roadway contains chapters on 17 pioneer families,
including the 7 below. Nineteen genealogical charts are included. An additional 11 pioneer
settlers are known to have been in the area: see When River Was Roadway for much shorter
accounts of these 11 settlers. Twenty seven additional names of people who were in the
district at some stage during the 19th
century are also provided.
http://cshsoc.wordpress.com/when-river-was-roadway/
The more southerly part of the district, occupied by Wolston Estate in the 19th
century, was
pioneered by Stephen Simpson and two generations of the Goggs family. The book
Pastoralists of Brisbane Town’s Fringe, provides information on these pioneers and also on
workers associated with the Wolston Estate during the 19th
century. Four genealogical charts
are included. http://cshsoc.wordpress.com/pastoralists-of-brisbane-towns-fringe/
BELZ: Peter and Wilhelmine
Peter Belz Wilhelmine Belz (née Korber)
Peter and Wilhelmine Belz were German immigrants who, after marrying in Brisbane, had seven
children. Their first-born child William died very young but they raised the other six children at
Seventeen Mile Rocks. From small beginnings as half-owner
(with Franz Walz) of a 29-acre block in 1865, Peter Belz had
acquired 196 acres 1 rood 24 perches by the early 20th
century and his eldest surviving son Francis Peter held an
additional 17 acres at that time.
Francis Peter stayed on in Seventeen Mile Rocks until his
retirement in 1946. He married Mary Angela Magee,
daughter of another local pioneer, John Vincent Magee.
They had five children, four daughters and a son. Francis
Peter is known particularly for the establishment and
operations of Round Hill Dairy, a highly successful dairy
farming enterprise. He eventually owned 335 acres 3 roods
30 perches in Seventeen Mile Rocks.
Photos courtesy of Deirdre Farbotko
The Pioneer Belz Park off the Centenary Highway near the Centenary Bridge was named in
recognition of the Belz family contribution to the area’s history. It was opened in 2008.
Two Belz descendants researched, wrote and published a book on Peter and Wilhelmine Belz and
their descendants - The Belz Family of Seventeen Mile Rocks by Gaylene Bourguignon & Deirdre
Farbotko, 2007 (Copies of this book are held at the Brisbane Square, Indooroopilly (reference only)
and Mount Ommaney Libraries).
Franz Peter (Francis Peter) Belz,
b. 22 October 1871.
HENRY: James and Mary Ann
James, eldest son of Robert and Frances Henry, was already a young man when he accompanied his
parents to Seventeen Mile Rocks. His father Robert purchased a block of land and settled there with
the family in 1865. While Robert senior moved with the family to the Kenmore area, James stayed on
in Seventeen Mile Rocks. He settled in the area of Rocks Riverside Park, living in a home on the
escarpment overlooking the river and working the fertile river flats below.
James married Mary Kilpatrick. They had eight children of whom two died as infants. James is
credited with having built the Seventeen Mile Rocks Uniting Church in 1888 and possibly also the
State School in 1877 (opened 1878).
The Henry family owned land in Seventeen Mile Rocks until about 1920, but descendants of the
family have lived in the Centenary suburbs area until the present day.
James & Mary Ann Henry. Courtesy of Phyllis and Norm Henry.
MAGEE: John Vincent, Maria (first wife) and Mary (second wife)
John Vincent Magee is the only one of the long-staying
pioneers to have purchased land at the October 1864 land
sales. Some of his descendants, members of the Counihan
family, still owned land in the district when suburban
development commenced almost a century later.
John Vincent Magee was from County Dublin, Ireland. His
own parents and some of his siblings also emigrated to
Queensland and assisted him in developing the Seventeen
Mile Rocks property in the early years. John Vincent also
acquired land across the river in Fig Tree Pocket and lived
there with his family. He continued to work land on both
sides of the river.
John Vincent had four children with his first wife Maria
English. After her early death, he married Mary McCullough
and had another six children. Mary Angela, eldest daughter
of John Vincent and Maria his first wife, married Francis
Peter Belz, son of another local pioneer family.
John Magee. Courtesy of Mrs Thelma Dempster
In the 20th century, his daughter Ellen Cecilia Counihan with her husband Tom and their family, lived
on the original Magee portion in Seventeen Mile Rocks and had a market garden. They raised their
family of five children there. Tom expanded the market garden after World War II, acquiring land on
the opposite side of Counihan Road in the area of Rocks Riverside Park.
John Vincent Magee and blended family, about 1887 Photo from Gladys M. Bailey Collection, SLQ.
The John Magee Park, on land adjacent to the original Magee portion, is named in honour of John
Vincent Magee. Counihan Road and Jennifer Street are named for his descendants, members of his
daughter Ellen Cecilia (Cis) Counihan’s family.
MAURER: August and Pauline Juliane (Julia)
August Maurer, a German immigrant, arrived later than the other long-staying settlers, but by the
early 20th century owned the largest amount of land held by any individual in the district. From his
initial purchase of portion 337 in 1873, August started increasing his land from 1881. By 1905 he
held approximately 306 acres in the area.
August and Julia migrated separately from Germany and met and
married in Brisbane, after August’s arrival in Seventeen Mile
Rocks. They had 13 children of whom 12 lived to adulthood.
The family remained in Seventeen Mile Rocks, including several
members of the second generation as adults with their own
families, well into the 20th century.
August’s son George owned and lived on land in the Mt
Ommaney area for many years, including where the quarry
operated. August’s son Fred and Fred’s own son, also Frederick,
held hundreds of acres of land in the Westlake-Middle Park area
in the pre-development suburban 20th century period. Another of
August and Julia’s sons, Edward, still owned and was living in
the south-western end (Riverhills-Westlake) of the Centenary
area when development commenced. With their spouses, they
each raised families in the district.
Maurer Street in Middle Park recognizes the contribution of the
Maurer pioneers to the district.
August and Julia Maurer.
Courtesy of Tess Maurer.
OLDFIELD: George and Emma
George Oldfield, an Englishman and
brother-in-law of Dr Joseph Bancroft, held
a portion of land on Oldfield Road from
1867. He never lived in the area but was a
well known identity in the northern suburbs.
He married late to a young German woman,
Emma Maria Theresa Heine. George and
Emma did not have children.
Some years after George’s death, Emma
moved to their Seventeen Mile Rocks
property which was known as Evergreen.
Her niece Mieta (Maria Therese Fikuart,
later Maria Brandes) lived there with her for
part of the time. Emma lived at Evergreen
until her death in 1941.
Emma Oldfield, late 19th
century. Courtesy of
Bancroft Family Collection.
SINNAMON FAMILIES
James Sinnamon senior purchased four portions of land in Seventeen Mile Rocks during 1865 and
1866. It appears likely that he and his wife Margaret did not move to the area immediately as sources
indicate that he was living on a clearing lease in Corinda at the time of his unexpected death in
November 1869. James senior and his older sons may have been living in makeshift accommodation
part-time at Seventeen Mile Rocks, clearing and working the land in the early years.
Margaret and the younger children, along with the eldest son John, lived in Beechwood after James
senior’s death. John
stayed on there after
his mother’s death in
1904.
Meanwhile, several
of the second
generation had
acquired property in
Seventeen Mile
Rocks in their own
right: James junior
who built Glen Ross
in 1887, George who
owned Rosemount,
Benjamin who
owned Avondale, and also daughter and son-in-law Sarah
and Colin White. John never married but the other four,
with their spouses, raised families in Seventeen Mile Rocks.
Another son, Samuel, also owned some land in the area
around the turn of the century (19th-20
th), though he did not
live in the area as an adult nor was he a farmer.
Descendants of George and of James junior were still living in the area in the 1950s. George junior’s
son and two daughters, honouring their father’s wishes, donated the family property to the Uniting
Church after their own deaths. This is the land on which the Sinnamon Retirement Village is built.
James junior’s son Sir Hercules Sinnamon continued to live at Glen Ross until his own death in 1994.
He re-purchased some former Sinnamon holdings including the Avondale property. Hercules
continued farming using farm managers and/or share farmers at the same time as Jindalee and other
suburbs were established. Hercules donated the land on which the Church now stands when it needed
to be shifted to make way for roadworks. He also purchased the Seventeen Mile Rocks State School,
to protect it from destruction, and relocated it on his land on Seventeen Mile Rocks Road. His
intention to create a historic precinct, including with these two properties and the three Sinnamon
houses on Seventeen Mile Rocks Road, was recognized with the 1992 Heritage listing of the
Sinnamon Farm historic precinct. The listing includes the three Sinnamon houses, the school and the
Macleod aviation site.
Margaret Sinnamon. Neg. no.
32113, SLQ.
John Sinnamon. Neg. no.
32118, SLQ.
WOLF: Henry and Sophia
Henry and his wife Sophia (née Littman) were both from Germany. They met and married after
arriving in Brisbane. Sophia’s mother, Augusta Korber, was a half-sister to Peter Belz’s wife
Wilhelmine Korber.
Henry acquired a 17-acre portion of land in 1872. He gradually acquired three more portions,
eventually owning 86 acres 1 rood 34 perches. These Wolf holdings later formed a substantial part of
the first Centenary suburb, Jindalee. Henry also acquired two subdivisions of the Wolston Estate, in
the Westlake-Riverhills area, when the Estate was broken up in 1901.
Sophia and Henry had 12 children, five girls and seven boys. All survived to adulthood except the
second child, a male. Most of the second generation moved away from the area. George Wolf, who
never married, still lived on and worked three of the original Wolf holdings in the Jindalee area until
suburban development commenced when he sold the land to the developers. George’s brother
William (Billy) farmed land in the Westlake-Riverhills area. Later, after Billy’s death, another
brother Herb was dairy farming on Billy’s former land. Like George, he sold the property to the
developers.
Wolf’s Farmhouse on crest of hill, slightly left of centre, 1950s. Photo taken from Coolooie Farm. In
2011 terms, the view is from the site of the Direct Factory Outlet looking up Sinnamon Road across
Centenary Highway and Jindalee Creek toward Jindalee; Wolf’s house being near the top of Coolaroo
Cres., Jindalee. Gladys M. Bailey collection, SLQ.
Further details (including genealogical charts, land holdings and land usage) about each
of these families, and other pioneer families, can be found in CSHSoc’s publication,
When River Was Roadway http://cshsoc.wordpress.com/when-river-was-roadway/